Friday, February 26, 2010

Both Dickens and DiEdwardo seek to change the cultural actions of society by writing and sharing novels.

Both Dickens and DiEdwardo seek to change the cultural actions of society by writing and sharing novels.

Lesson 1: research the use of social justice as a reason to write


Find a passion that moves you to research.  Visit local libraries and read about your passion.  For me, poverty runs thorugh my memory. I experienced her in my life at different moments.  I remember! I suggest that you might read my book on the use of memory to write.  The Fourth R is available through Authorhouse.com/bookstore

Lesson 2: design methodology of applying the social justice paradigm for writing

Trust your own writing methods. Write daily.  Journaling is a great plan. I keep journals for regimens and save them in my home library. Refer back to your journals when you need writing material. Take your cause, for me, poverty, and experience through actions. I volunteer for a local soup kitchen. First of all, I learned that poverty is generous and can help all who serve, those who need food and those who serve the food.  I learned to care about myself as I cared for others.
Lesson 3: characters and social justice

My sister Pat developed a character based on social justice.  He was starved as a child in a similar manner to the starvation our father experienced in World War 2. We started with starvation.  Then we developed a story.

Lesson 4: setting and social justice

The place should be based on your own experiences.  I walk through forests near the town that I picked to stand as my setting.  I feel the ground and write when I am really telling a truth based on imagination.

Lesson 5: mood creates voice to resound themes of social justice

Mood is the feeling the read gets from the book. What can your novel do for the reader? How can the voice of your created humans benefit others?
Lesson 6: themes dynamically bring us to a state of relaxation and vision to understand truths

We write to gain hope.  Through her treatments, Pat talks about the books we write. View our complete works on our online posting areas such as my personal wiki space: http:maryannpasdadiedwardo.wikiaspaces.com and visit www.authorhouse.com/bookstore for my book lists.

Lesson 7: literature is inspirational

Your writing can change you as the works of Dickens changed him.

Lesson 8: symbolism in inspirational literature

Animals symbolize the natural world. we write about Pat's non-profit service dog organization. Poverty symbolizes the pain of the human condition.

Lesson 9: plot as a methodology of social justice

Our plots are based on our experiences.

Lesson 10: use a 21st century digital presentation

We blog our themes.

Lesson 11: reflect issues with the human condition

Poverty is a theme that reflects history and suffering.

Lesson 12: write about real experiences

You can write your own truths.

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